Disclaimer: Xena, Gabrielle and any other characters featured in the actual TV series
are copyrighted to MCA/Universal and Renaissance Pictures while the rest of the story and
other characters are my own.

"By day they're giving us abrazos [hugs] and saying they'll
cooperate," says a senior U.S. drug enforcement official of the Mexican authorities,
"and by night they're working with the bad guys, unraveling everything that we
accomplished that day."

**********

"Welcome back to CNN Headline News. Im Julia Frankel. In our top story
tonight, President William Arnold, in a meeting with his senior advisors at the Office of
National Drug Control Policy, renewed his administrations campaign pledge to combat
Americas escalating drug problem. Here is a portion of his comments."

The war on drugs is a war of attrition, threatening the very fabric of our
society. Education and prevention alone have not kept up with the overwhelming flow of
illegal narcotics into our country. Additional steps are necessary. Bold, decisive action
is called for.

Mazatlán, Sinaloa, Mexico.

Two midnight black GMC Suburbans pulled up outside a small, well kept, single story
adobe home. Despite the dusty roads they had traveled to get to this residential
neighborhood, east of the main tourist area, the vehicles were nearly spotless. The
moonlight shimmered off of their carefully waxed exteriors as the doors swung open.

A total of seven well-dressed men emerged. Young, dark, handsome, looking as though
they were just returning from a night on the town. Only the rifles and pistolas in
their hands betrayed their true intentions. Feet tramped on coarse gravel, moving towards
the house.

Wordlessly, one young man motioned to another, and they each took up positions next to
the front door. The rest of the men fell in behind them, weapons drawn.

Other homes pressed in around the small house, and yet even so the owners had managed
to cultivate a small garden in a tiny courtyard at the front entrance. Peppers and lettuce
peeked up from the well-watered bed, and a childs ball lay cast off to one side,
forgotten by its owner.

The lead man nodded.

Somewhere in the night a dog barked, its sharp cry echoing down the lonely, empty calle.

We must secure our borders.

A wrenching, splintering sound, as the front door of the casa was battered down.
The men streamed inside, quickly finding the small bedroom where a man and his wife lay in
bed, a child sleeping between them. Nearby, an infant slumbered in a bassinette. A small
hanging mobile featuring puffy clouds and smiling orbs of sunlight hung down from the
ceiling, just out of reach of any babys playful fingers.

"No, no, por favor!" The woman screamed, grabbing for her child with
one hand, while reaching for her startled husband with the other. "José!" she
cried, her eyes wide with fear. Frantically, the man grabbed for something under his
pillow, even as the butt end of a rifle swung down to meet his head.

Blood spilled from the side of his face onto the white sheets. He was roughly dragged
from his bed, wearing only a pair of under-shorts.

The startled wails of the infant joined in with the shrieks of its mother, while the
toddler merely sat in silence, a thumb stuck in his mouth. He allowed himself to be nearly
crushed by his mothers fearful embrace, as they both watched the Bad Men take his
father away.

We must reduce demand through programs and education.

The sweet scent of chaparral filled the air, carried along by the light wind that blew
down from the Sierra Madres. In the clearing at the end of a deserted road, sat a white
Mercedes S-600 sedan. Two figures leaned against it, one taller than the other.

"Manuel is coming," the taller man said, snapping closed a cell phone and
slipping it into the pocket of his white silk shirt. Eyes as dark as onyx stared out of a
face featuring the chiseled features of a movie star, as he watched the two Suburbans
making their way down the dusty road. He was clean-shaven, with wavy black hair that
matched the color of his linen pants and tooled leather dress boots. He glanced at his
watch and sighed, clearly impatient.

The two Suburbans ground to a halt, kicking up clouds of dust in the night air. The men
tumbled out, hauling a dazed, blindfolded José Gutierrez between them.

"This pollo was easy pickings, Enrico," Manuel said, jabbing at
Josés chin with the barrel of his pistol. "We found him sleeping in his
mammas bed, suckling like a baby!"

"Señor León? Is that you?" Trembling, both from fear and the
coolness of the mountain breeze on his bare flesh, José was beginning to grasp some sense
of his predicament.

"What did I tell you, José, eh?" Enrico nodded at Manuel. A vicious punch
landed in Josés gut. Retching, the man wouldve fallen to his knees but for
the two men holding his roped arms at his back. "The mordida I give you is not
enough?" A cold, feigned outrage colored Enricos voice. "All that money?
And making you jefe of the local federales? Youre a big man now, si?
And all because I ask for a few favors."

Clucking, he stepped closer, lifting Josés head up by the roots of his hair.
"You have a nice house. Nice car. Nice women. Thanks to who?"

We must establish and enforce policies that tell the drug trafficker in no
uncertain terms, that he is not welcome in the United States of America.

"Por favor, Señor León!" José was wild now as the terror, the
desperation overwhelmed him. His narrow, bony chest heaved in and out. "What do you
want? I give you anything! Take my house, my car  please! I serve only you! Only
you, from now on! I take no more mordida from Señor Benitez! No more 
I promise you!"

Specifically, my administration will work tirelessly in cooperation with our
partner in this battle, Mexico, in a strategy that will strike at the very heart of drug
production.

Nodding once more, Enrico stepped back as Manuel cocked his pistol, pointing it at the federales
forehead.

"Thats right, José," Enrico said, his eyes narrowing in the dark.
"You will take no more."

The muzzle of the pistol flashed. A short pop! released into the Mexican air.

To do anything less, my friends, means that we will continue to pay a terrible
price. There are over 52 thousand drug related deaths per year in the United States, with
5 million Americans chronically addicted to drugs. And annually, we sustain 110 billion
dollars in overall damages attributable to drug abuse. Left unchecked, illegal drug
trafficking will continue to inflict violence and corruption upon our communities, and
threaten the family values we hold so dear.

Bending down to Josés crumpled form, Manuel swiped the blood from his gun onto
the cloth of the federales soiled shorts. He then slipped the firearm back
into his belt holster. "Do we leave him here for the coyotes, el Halcón?"

El Halcón.

Falcon.

Enrico smiled at the use of his honored nickname. A bird of the air, a hunter. Too
swift and too cunning to ever be caught.

"No. Have the boys take him back. Leave him in front of the police station,
eh?" He started to turn towards the waiting Mercedes, and stopped, a cold smile
creeping onto his face. "Oh, and cut off the bastards ears."

Manuel lifted his eyebrows in surprise, but he knew better than to question el
Halcón in front of his men.

"He wouldnt listen," Enrico explained. "Now, maybe the others
will." And with that, he got into the back of the car, with Manuel close behind him.

Regulation and law enforcement are the first lines of defense against such
unacceptable activity.

"The fucking idiot." Enrico stared out through the tinted glass as the
Mercedes pulled away, watching as his bodyguards began the last of their work
on Josés lifeless body. "If only he had come to me first."

"Hah!" Manuel released a sharp laugh, clapping his employer on the arm.
"Who are you kidding? You would have killed him anyway."

Enrico turned away, settling himself down into the buttery-soft leather seat. Smirking,
he reached for the bottle of tequila he kept handy for just such celebratory occasions. He
grinned at Manuel. "Si. The stupid fuck."

The two men began to laugh, as the car moved quickly back towards the flickering lights
of Mazatlán.

**********

El Paso, Texas, USA.

I am convinced that if we all work together towards these goals, committing
ourselves to achieving immediate, significant results, that this is a war we can
win.

"That was President William Arnold, speaking today in Washington, D.C. In other
news tonight"

"You are so fucked up."

Lane Sinclairs slightly slurred voice belligerently sounded in the hollow
emptiness of her apartment. In the darkness, illuminated only by the glow from the
television screen, she was uncertain as to whether shed spoken more to the
squawking, salt and pepper haired image of the vacuous new president, or to herself.
Deciding that the who of it didnt really matter after all, she violently
jabbed at the remote control sitting on the arm of her overstuffed chair. In a blur of
static, CNN was replaced with the latest mindless offering from the World Wrestling
Federation.

The war on drugs.

Some war, Lane considered, stubbing out her cigarette in an already overflowing
ashtray. A war where they were out-manned, outgunned, and outsmarted by the opposition.
After all, she ought to know, right? As a soldier on the front lines, working
the Mexican border for the DEA, a part of its SWBI  the Southwest
Border Initiative.

What a joke. On her best days, she felt like a modern day Don Quixote, jousting at
windmills.

We should have surrendered a long time ago, el Presidente!

She lifted a smudged glass to the screen in a mockery of a toast, and then kicked it
back, anticipating the bite of the golden liquid on her lips, her tongue.

Nothing.

Frowning, she swirled the glass around, examining it through bloodshot blue eyes, and
found it empty. With a heavy sigh, she reached for the bottle of V.O. on the tin tray
stand that doubled as her living room coffee table.

Classy.

She pulled the bottle towards her, briefly regarding the remains of a grilled cheese
and tomato  sans tomato  sandwich, resting on a paper plate. Her government
issued weapon, a Glock 21 pistol, .45 caliber, sat next to the discarded meal,
along with her ID and shield.

Special Agent Lane M. Sinclair.

The face that stared back at her from the photo ID looked so young, so naïve. It had
been so long ago, or so it seemed, back when her unstoppable drive and the power of her
conviction left her no room for doubt that what she was doing was right. Then, shed
been out to change the world.

Lane poured the whiskey into her glass. A cascading stream of memories, most of them
bad.

Her ice was long gone, she really should go get more. But shed been reluctant to
move her feet from the upside down crate that served as her footrest, and so she was
forced to drink the whiskey straight up.

Nothing new in that.

Shed been transferred to the El Paso Field Division just a couple of months or so
ago from San Diego, at the conclusion of the SWBIs latest assault in the drug war,
known as operation El Cid. Its objective? To bring down the spoiled
son-of-a-bitch brat of one of Tijuanas biggest drug traffickers, Luis Castaneda.

The son, Vicente, was certainly not the father, theyd soon found out that much.
Luis Castaneda was estimated to be moving at least 200 million dollars worth of product
across the border each week. Gross. Vicente did barely a fraction of that. Still, he was
the easier target, and was bound to get the DEA and the administration some good P.R.

So shed followed her orders.

Theyd spent nearly a year undercover, tracking the loutish playboy from the dance
clubs, to his mistresses, to the picaderos he ran - the shooting
galleries where well-heeled day trippers from El Norte came to get their hits
of heroin and cocaine.

In the end theyd arrested him in San Diego with great fanfare. All thanks to a
friend of Vicentes from USC, a friend whod become a business
partner, whod decided to turn. It had taken some doing, but eventually, Lane had
been able to persuade him. Yes, the arrest of Vicente Castaneda had been big news.

The deaths a week later of two Tijuana officersshed worked closely with
on the operation, however, was not. Poppa Luis, taking his revenge. So theyd snagged
one of Luis Castanedas sons, so what? The bastard still had four others, and after
all it was Luis himself who was the big fish theyd been unable to hook after all
this time.

So her personnel file called Operation El Cid a resounding success.

Big fuckin deal.

She took a swallow of V.O., feeling the alcohol burn its trail over her tongue, down
her throat, into her belly. She wished it could burn it all away, the knowledge of the
futility of what she was doing. In the light of day it wasnt so bad. Then, she could
halfway believe that she hadnt lost her ideals, that her efforts still had some
value. Some worth. But at night, when the demons came, the camouflage shed arranged
so carefully in place was stripped away, and she could see the truth for what it really
was.

A truth she didnt have any answers for. And if she didnt, hell, how could
the president? It was all so so pathetic.

Now, here she was in El Paso, within spitting distance of the simmering stew of
humanity just over the border that was Ciudad Juárez, where both drug abuse and narcotics
smuggling were ballooning out of control. Mostly thanks to the powerful Juárez drug
cartel, and its up and coming competition, the Mazatlán federation, headed by its chief patron,
the infamous Enrico León.

El Halcón.

Lane was used to moving from place to place, and so this new assignment in El Paso was
merely the latest in a long line of having to learn the lay of the land, of getting her
feet wet; figuring out who she could trust, and who she couldnt. Shed been
able to sense the undercurrent of resentment in the office from the day shed
arrived.

She, the hotshot superstar agent from the Tijuana operation. And the Matamoros one,
before that. Or perhaps Miami.

Right.

Frankly, she didnt really give a fuck about what her co-workers might think of
her. Shed always been one to let her actions speak for her, and this latest gig was
no different.The special agent in charge of the office, David Starks, seemed
inoffensive enough. And, grudgingly, shed come to like and respect her new partner,
Clarence Hayes.

Clarence had been with the El Paso division for a few years now, and took it all with a
grain of salt. "We do today what we can do today, Lane," hed told her, a
smile playing about the corner of his mouth. "Aint nobody yet thats been
able to predict tomorrow, girl."

Girl.

Normally she wouldnt have let anyone get away with that. But Clarence, ah, what
the hell. He had two little girls of his own at home, so shed supposed he was
entitled.

In any event, here she was.

A new posting.

A new assignment.

A fresh chance to try and get it right.

To do her job as best she could, while at the same time performing a high-wire act to
keep the goddamned interference from the FBI and the INS at a minimum. Would this be the
time shed finally be able to trap lightning in a bottle? To hook the big fish? A
small part of her, the proud, resilient part that still lurked somewhere deep within her
whiskey-drenched soul, still hoped that she could.

Damn WWF! Lane released an impatient breath of air, and changed the channel
again. One of those nature shows, now. They were somewhere in Africa, probably. Tall,
sun-burnished savannah grasses waved lazily in the wind. The sun was setting overhead, and
a flock of birds was flying somewhere. She idly wondered where they were going, and
why, envying them their untroubled existence.

She took another swallow of her drink and studied herself; she was still wearing the
same white T-shirt and worn jeans that shed donned nearly 24 hours ago, when she and
Clarence were up and out early on a surveillance job. She really should go to sleep, she
knew that, but tomorrow  today, actually - was Sunday, her day off. Sleep
didnt come easily for her anyway. Typically, she had to either work herself to
exhaustion or drink herself to it, and at the moment, she was well on her way to both.

The image on the screen changed. There was a herd of of something on the
savannah. Antelope? Ibex? Who the fuck knew. But the creature that stalked them she knew
well enough. A leopard, sleek, dangerous, staying close to the ground as it stalked its
prey, a baby animal whod wandered away from its mother.

Lane knew what would come next. Her stomach churned at the thought of it, but she could
not tear her eyes away. She was transfixed. The baby wandered farther away from the herd,
bleating out a plaintive call. The leopard lifted its head, its mouth hanging open,
tasting, smelling on the wind the position of its target.

It was all so familiar to her. The confident look of the hunter. The helpless,
disbelieving face of the victim.

The muscles of the leopard tensed and coiled, and then it sprang, a powerful, efficient
blur of movement, taking the baby animal in its strong jaws, bringing it to the ground.

Violent.

Bloody.

It was the eyes she recognized most. Eyes glazed in death, and another pair of eyes,
hooded, awash in an almost sensual satisfaction at its victory.

Shit.

It was natures way, right? Survival of the fittest.

Stretching out her long form, Lane closed her eyes, and turned the television off.

Shed seen enough.

**********

She stood as still as a statue, frozen at the double doors leading to the terrace off
of her bedroom, her short blonde hair and pale features throwing off an almost ghostly,
luminous glow in the moonlight. Despite the warmth of the night, she hugged herself,
running her hands up and down her arms, as though the light blue satin nightgown she wore
did little to keep away an imagined chill.

She stared out at the night, past the courtyard and the fountain, past the formal
landscaping and the high adobe walls, unable to sleep. She breathed in deeply, taking in
the sweet scent of orchids and hibiscus, their fragrance providing a soothing balm to her
tortured mind.

He wasnt home yet.

She knew what he was doing, damn him, but there had been nothing shed been able
to do to stop him even if shed tried, which she had not. It was too late for that
now. Shed long ago made her bed, both literally and figuratively, and now she had no
other choice but to lie in it.

Oh, it had its benefits, that was for certain. And wasnt it the benefits that had
attracted her to him in the first place? The expensive cars, the cash that flowed like a
never-ending stream, and other things. Not to mention the attention hed paid
her, treating her like his princess. Or, at least at first, he had.

She and her girlfriends had been on one of their frequent fun trips from LA
to Cancun. After all, what was a bored little rich girl with too much time on her hands to
do? Her parents had barely noticed whenever she was gone, and LA was always full of the
usual crowd. Theyd no longer interested her.

There was something different about Cancun.

Sure, it was touristy enough, but the nightlife, the party life there had an element of
excitement, of danger, even, that was absent in her stateside soirees. And with
Enrico he seemed to know everyone, and everyone knew him. He became the distraction
she looked forward to. Her own, personal Don Juan.

There were the gifts and the romantic dinners, and he took her to the private clubs
where members only were allowed, members and the gringas they brought as guests,
hoping for a quick blowjob or a hurried screw before the girls returned home north of the
border with one helluva story to tell.

But it was different with Enrico.

Every time she left, he begged her not to leave. Told her how he died a little inside
when she was not with him. And he was so so damn good looking, so tall and muscular,
with his dark eyes and full, seductive lips that whispered to her everything shed
ever wanted to hear from a man. And he certainly knew how to show her a good time, too.
Good times that she found quite addictive, as the weeks and months wore on.

He was a businessman, hed explained to her, and his business life kept him in
Mexico, although his well-to-do parents had traveled north to San Diego when it had been
time for his mother to give birth, giving him prized dual citizenship. Hed attended
all the best stateside private schools, just as she and her friends had. And so when he
finally asked her to marry him, so that he could keep her all to himself in his hometown
of San Raphael, an affluent suburb of Mazatlán, she figured it would be just like
marrying someone from home. While at the same time, allowing herself to get the hell away
in the bargain.

Permanently.

Her parents had barely blinked an eye when shed told them. And what a shame, that
theyd already booked that trip to Europe for the date when the wedding was set.
Plans simply couldnt be changed, you see.

No matter. She hadnt missed them at all.

Didnt miss home, either, in fact. After all, how could you mourn for something
youd never had any real affection for, in the first place?

But as time passed and she and Enrico settled down in the home hed built for them
in San Raphael, a home that looked like a castle more than anything else, shed found
that nothing had really changed. Not with her. Shed felt as dead and empty inside
here as she ever had anywhere else in the world. Enricos attentions had rapidly
waned as hed developed new extracurricular interests, and shed sadly
discovered very quickly how the house hed built, his castle, was really more like a
prison.

Casa Mariposa, he called it, the house of the butterfly. And
thats exactly what she felt like.

A butterfly.

Trapped. Its wings pinned down, unable to take flight.

The joke was on her, really. For even if she could fly away, where would she go? He had
what she needed, damn it all, and the bigger part of herself doubted whether shed
ever have the strength to leave that. It was complicated, this prison of her own
making. And so shed done what she could to help keep herself sane, to survive the
mindless sameness of each perfect, sun-splashed day.

Shed gotten herself involved in his business.

Hed been reluctant at first to let her in, refused her, until shed proved
to him that she had an aptitude for it. Where he relied on charm and, failing in that,
brute force, she possessed the boardroom sensibilities that proved far more effective in
dealing with the business aspects of what was, after all, Mexicos number one export.
After a time, she and Enrico had reached a wary agreement about her helping him. The one
proviso, attributable to his Latin machismo, was that his fellow
businessmen must never know.

To the outside world, Enrico León, the falcon, was the Mazatlán
cartel. And she was nothing but his pretty plaything, his arm piece, the gringa butterfly
hed managed to snare in his net.

She would never get away.

She accepted that.

And so shed simply made the best of a bad situation.

A squeal of brakes as the white Mercedes pulled into the cobbled courtyard.

Laughter, as Enrico emerged from the rear of the vehicle, along with Manuel Diaz, his
right-hand man.

The driver pulled the car away, taking it back to the garages where they had more
luxury vehicles than she could count, including quite a few customized, bulletproofed
SUVs.

Briefly squeezing her eyes shut, she glided back into the bedroom, closing the louvered
teakwood doors. As though in a trance, she moved back across the cool, tiled floor,
slipping into her canopied bed that was all crisp whites, pale roses, and goose-down.

She steeled herself for what was to come. Knowing she couldnt fool him; not even
sure whether she wanted to.

And then she heard his heavy footsteps on the stairs as he mounted his way towards her
room. Hoping hed pass her by in favor of his private suite. Yet praying that he
would not, thanks to the shameful, gut-twisting craving that she was powerless to control.

The blanched oaken door to her room swung open. She hadnt bothered to lock it;
she never did anymore. Hed broken it down more times than she cared to recall.

His darkened silhouette approached, so menacing in the half-light from the windows. She
could hear his heavy breathing; the smell of him told her the story of where hed
been.

And what hed done.

"Its over, Teresa."

How calm, how matter-of-fact his voice was! As though he were commenting on the
weather.

"It wasnt necessary, you know that," she told him. And her pulse
quickened as he drew closer still.

"Yes, it was." The jingle of a belt buckle. "We had to send a
message."

She felt the slight dip as he lowered himself onto the bed, detected the displacement
of air as he removed his shirt and carefully folded it onto a chair. How particular he was
with his clothes, like a dandy, sometimes!

"You didnt have to kill him." She rolled on her side away from him.

"It meant nothing."

Funny, how cold it could be, here in paradise. So cold.

"We will have no more trouble," he said, pressing his body against hers, his
breath hot in her ear.

"Get away from me." She gave him a hard shove. "You stink of booze and
blood, you bastardo!

"No!" he hissed, grabbing at her face, squeezing it, turning her towards him.
"Tonight, you will be my wife!"

"Why should tonight be different from any other night?" She wrenched away
from him, tears of pain and anger stinging her eyes. Yet, she was proud of herself, how
cold her voice was, how steady. He had taught her well. She pushed herself up in the bed,
edging away from him. "Why dont you go! Go to your little casa chica!"

There. It was out. Shed known about it for months, suspected it for far longer
than that, but this was the first time shed ever confronted him with it.

He shoved himself off of the bed, his pants slung low on his hips, and ran a hand
through his hair. God, he still looked good. His smoothly muscled form had yet to show any
sign of the rich foods and potent drinks he so enjoyed on a daily basis. "My casa
chica?" His voice was hoarse. Clearly, he was taken by surprise.

"Yes," she shouted, her anger at last getting the better of her. "Go. Go
to your mistress! You think I dont know about it?"

He spun around to face her. "Do you think I care that you do?" he sneered,
recovering. His eyes glittered. So heartless. So empty. So like her own.

He was down on the bed again, knee first, pulling her towards him as if to kiss her.

"No!" She struggled half-heartedly, knowing shed fought this fight
before, knowing she could not hope to win it. But still, she had to try.

And then, "Im not the only one with a mistress, Teresa!" He was on top
of her now, the weight of him pinning her down, but he levered himself up on his arms.
"Isnt that right?" He reached into his pants pocket, and plucked out a
small, one-inch square glassine bag, its contents as white and powdery as the sandy
beaches of Cozumel. He dangled it in front of her in the moonlight, taunting her.
"Isnt that right?" he demanded again.

Oh, God. She felt as though she were swimming underwater. Down so far, so deep, that it
seemed as though she would never surface. Trapped in a place where no one would ever find
her.

"Yes, Rico." she whispered, feeling a tear escape from the corner of her eye.
She stopped fighting him. "Youre always right."

He smiled, a hard, bitter smile, and he bent down once more to kiss her full on the
lips. A husband, making love to his wife.

Teresa León closed her eyes, and let herself go numb. It would be over soon. And then
he would give her what she needed.